OER Recommender |
Out of Ground Zero: Catastrophe and Memory, Fall 2005
Author: Scribner, Charity
Subject: Humanities, Social Sciences
Institution Name:
M.I.T.
Collection Name: MIT OpenCourseWare
Abstract: Subject offers a cross-cultural and trans-historical perspective on the problems of catastrophe and the process of memorializing. It asks what media and various art forms can offer to the project of collective memory. It engages key texts on the notion of "ground zero" in the urban cultures of Europe and Japan, and draws from them a provisional theoretical framework with which to analyze the public responses to the World Trade Center attacks. Topics covered include: The Enola Gay controversy, architectural sites at Hiroshima and Auschwitz, the aesthetic and iconographic dimensions of the events of September 11, and the media influence on our perception of global commerce, transportation systems, surveillance, non-Western cultures and oppositional political formations. Authors include Robert Musil, Maurice Halbwachs, Shusaku Arakawa, Michael Hogan, Ariella Azoulay, Chomsky, Freud, and Edward Said. Taught in English. Details
Course Type: Full Course
Material Types: Homework and Assignments, Syllabi
Media Formats: Text/HTML, Downloadable docs
Language: English
Conditions of Use: Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike 3.0 Additional InformationGeographic
Regional Relevance: All
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Keywords
Ariella Azoulay
Chomsky
Edward Said
Foreign Languages and Literatures
Freud
Germany
Japan
Maurice Halbwachs
Michael Hogan
Robert Musil
September 11
Shusaku Arakawa
World Trade Center
art
collective memory
discourse
global commerce
media
memorial
non-Western cultures
oppositional political formations
surveillance
transportation systems
Keywords are descriptions assigned by the provider or the OER Commons Team.
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